Leila’s Shop, with its picture-perfect grocery store and a cosy café side by side, is located near Arnold Circus in Shoreditch. Its interior with well-used wooden furniture and the kitchen where pots and pans hanging from the ceiling, is like a homy diner in French countryside. The menu is quite simple and short; toast & jam, fried eggs, sandwich with Comté cheese & cornichon (pickles), as well as polish ham & cornichon sandwich and Polish platter. We ordered eggs fried with sage, and eggs fried with Serrano ham. The dish is served on the pipping hot cast-iron small frying pan on a wooden board, with 2 slices of toasted rye bread. Their mid-century style dishes and cutlery are very cute as well.

Although their warm and rusty-chic interior is really nice, and their food, although the eggs are bit too greasy, and Monmauth Coffee espresso are decent, something bothered me slightly. One thing is their rather expensive price, contrary to its plain appearance – it is not in posh Kensington & Chelsea, but in London’s East End! Their fried eggs with 2 eggs and few sage leaves is £5, and with Serrano ham costs £6. They probably use fresh organic eggs directly from selected farms, but I can make it £2 at most, grabbing organic eggs and good quality bread (2 slices) and few hams from a posh grocery store, and cooking with organic Tuscan extra virgin olive oil from M’s mum. What bothers me is that the fried eggs are quite simple dish that you don’t have to be a trained chef to cook, and charge us overprice for it. I can bet that many women who cook agree with me! It is my fault that I ordered the dish, but I thought the it would be a bit more elaborate, considering the price. Another thing I don’t like is not-really-friendly waiter & waitresses, like at many other independent ‘sophisticated’ and ‘stylish’ cafés. They do minimum job, and don’t bother themselves to give us a little smile (or they are just shy??). I checked people’s reviews online and it was divided, though more people love Leila’s. The complainers say more or less the same things as me. But Leila is full of loyal crowds, typical who go to that kind of cafe – liberal middle class with some money (or pretending that they are), and seems to be all set. By the way, the owner has a stool in Borough market as well – that tells everything. Probably they wouldn’t care about the criticism from not-as-good-as-them customers like me!

I might be too critical as I went there only once. I have to admit that Leila is a very nice cafe, perfect for a cup of tea in the sunny afternoon. I will try something else next time, like Polish ham sandwich, and see.

In this area in Shoreditch, more and more cool venues opened recently, including The Boundary (Sir Conran’s boutique hotel), as the new Shoreditch High street railway station is about to open in April. Probably Shoreditch will soon be another Notting Hill. The change is good for us as café and design maniacs, but at the same time I feel a bit sad the area is loosing its good old edgy feel.